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Home  » Cricket » What Ponting promised Ashwin on 'Mankading'

What Ponting promised Ashwin on 'Mankading'

October 07, 2020 22:30 IST
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'He said he is talking to ICC committee about penalty. He is trying really hard to keep his promise.'

Delhi Capitals spinner Ravichandran Ashwin and coach Ricky Ponting have a word in the dugout during their Indian Premier League against Royal Challengers Bangalore, in Dubai.

IMAGE: Delhi Capitals spinner Ravichandran Ashwin and coach Ricky Ponting have a word in the dugout during their Indian Premier League against Royal Challengers Bangalore, in Dubai. Photograph: BCCI/IPL

Delhi Capitals coach Ricky Ponting has promised his premier spinner Ravichandran Ashwin that he would speak to the ICC about imposing a run-penalty on teams whose batsmen back up too far at the non-striker's end.

 

Ashwin, who was in the news for running out Jos Buttler after the batsman had backed up too far at non-striker's end during an IPL game last year, was seen giving a warning to Royal Challengers Bangalore opener Aaron Finch in the IPL match in Dubai on Monday.

"You can't stop thefts till thieves repent. I can't be police forever. I tagged Ponting in the tweet. He (Ponting) said he would have asked me to run him (Finch) out. Wrong is wrong he said.

"He said he is talking to ICC committee about penalty. He is trying really hard to keep his promise," Ashwin revealed on his YouTube channel.

Ashwin's gesture was a mark of respect for Ponting's view point of not running the non-striker out. Besides, the let-off was also to do with Finch being an old teammate.

"He (Finch) has been a good friend since KXIP (days), so I let it slide as a final warning," Ashwin said.

However, he also said that he had apprehensions that non-strikers would back up since one side of the ground was big and Royal Challengers Bangalore had good runners who can convert ones into twos.

"One side of ground was big, so I knew someone would back up. Because they have guys in their team who can convert twos. So I went into my jump and saw a golden helmet floated past. It kept going on its own.

"I stopped and thought, he was still outside, just staring," he said.

The senior off-spinner also said that at least 10 runs should be docked in order to stop batsmen from stealing yards at the non-striker's end.

"Punishment should be severe. Dock 10 runs for backing up and nobody will do that. Getting batsman out like this is no skill but bowlers don't have any option either."

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